Still, Jeffrey returned ten minutes later with a “Step it up, Woodson!” and an aggressive hand clap in her face, for no apparent reason. It was a bit over the top, honestly. Maybe Jeffrey was looking to get some acting gigs out of Chef’s Special.
But even though Dahlia knew he was being ridiculous, it didn’t feel great, being humiliated on national TV. She thought she’d gotten that over with already, during her fish taco tumble. Was this how she was being pigeonholed? The bumbling, incompetent one?
“Hey,” London said, jolting Dahlia out of her reverie.
They were holding the rolling pin they’d been using on their rugelach dough.
“There has to be some way to accidentally smack Jeffrey over the head with this, right?” They tilted it in their hands. “We could make it look smooth somehow. Would probably only result in a minor concussion.”
Dahlia nodded, trying to tamp down her smile.
“It would make for some good TV,” she concurred.
“We would merely be doing our part for the ratings.”
“Or maybe . . . ” Dahlia glanced around the counter and picked up a crostino. “We start with some light torture, work up to concussions? Just crush a bunch of these and stuff them into his socks, make him walk around on it. Like Legos.”
London tilted their head, considering. “I like where you’re going with this, Woodson.”
“Or . . .” Dahlia’s eyes snagged on the bowl she had just put her muhammara dip into. “You could hold him down, and I could rub some peppers on his eyeballs?”
London leaned forward a bit, smothering a half cough, half laugh in their fist.
“That is . . . yes. Of course,” they said.
“Make him swallow cinnamon?” she pondered, thinking about the rugelach. She shook her head. “No, too cliché.”
Dahlia drummed her fingers on the table, fully invested in this game now.
“Oh!” She grabbed the bowl of walnuts farther down the table, waiting to be crushed and wrapped into the rugelach dough. “I got it.” She turned to London, holding the bowl up to her chin. “Crushing crushed nuts into his nuts.”
Except at the exact moment this triumphant idea came out of her mouth, their entire corner of the set seemed to settle into a magical hush, making her words ring out, loud and uncomfortable. Like that one time back home at her office when everyone somehow decided to shut their mouths seconds before she had decided to let out a covert fart.
Ahmed and Beth, at the table in front of them, along with, Dahlia couldn’t help noticing, the nearest camera, all slowly turned to look at her.
“We could just slip them into his underwear . . . ” Dahlia murmured, for some reason, as if it was important to finish explaining the plan to London. She cleared her throat as their neighbors continued to stare. And some tiny part of her brain whispered fuck it.
“Just, you know,” she said, voice a bit louder, “discussing . . . foodie kinks.”
London burst out laughing. It was the first time Dahlia had actually heard London laugh, for real. It was high pitched and wheezy. She loved it.
Dahlia tried to ignore the stares, dumping the walnuts onto the table and picking up a knife.
She kicked at London’s foot under the table. “You started it.”
So maybe Chef’s Special was a little like high school.
Ahmed and Beth eventually turned back around, and London looked down at their hands, shaking their head. They tried to calm their face, refocus on their tasks.
“Knives,” they said quietly, after a moment.
“Huh?” Dahlia looked over at them, eyebrows raised.
“For our torture. We could probably get a lot done with knives.”
“London.” Dahlia blinked. “Damn. You are getting dark with this.”
“Look, I’m doing what I can to get my brain away from foodie kinks.”
“Fine. Killjoy.” Dahlia paused her walnut crushing to reassess the table once again. Her eyes went wide. “But listen, if Jeffrey was into some weird food stuff, just imagine how many things here he could—”
“Miss Woodson.”
London jumped as Tanner Tavish appeared in front of them, breaking London’s half-horrified, half-turned-on anticipation of whatever Dahlia was about to say next.
Tavish planted his hands on their table, leaned in disturbingly close to Dahlia. She straightened, sobering. London clenched their fists.
“I’m intrigued to see that this competition is so entertaining for you.” London noticed a cameraman closing in behind Tavish’s shoulder. “But the time is ticking, and the work you do today affects your teammates as well. I might also remind you both”—his eyes flickered London’s way before refocusing on Dahlia—“that you are miked while you are on set. If you can’t take this competition seriously, or conduct yourselves with professionalism, I assure you there are countless other amateur chefs across America who would be happy to take your place.”